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So Long, Savannah!

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Scan day: 28 February 2014 UTC
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Description: Discuss the lost and abandoned thermonuclear bombs that litter the ocean floor threatening Savannah and other cities along the Atlantic seaboard.
Sent: Thursday, September 06, 2007 11:07 AM Subject: Nuke off coast of Georgia       My name is Philip Reiss and I was in the Air Force fifty years ago. My Air Force Specialty Code (AFSC) was 46150—that meant “munitions handling and loading specialist.” My last assignment was Westover AFB in Massachusetts. While there, from May of 1958 until my discharge on July 24th, 1959, I was a member of a crew whose function was to load “nukes” on the SAC B-52s assigned to that base.
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Page title:So Long, Savannah!"
Keywords:thermonuclear, H-bomb, A-bomb, Air Force, nuclear, uranium, plutonium, payload, lost, abandoned, bomb, bombs, Palomares, Savannah, Goldsboro, explosion, fission, fusion, Thule, Cold War, Curtis LeMay, B-52, Soviets, ocean, coastline, Atlantic, bomber, I-80, Interstate 80, Georgia, radiation, weapon, fissionable, terrorist, high explosives, so long, Manhattan, broken arrow, B-47, mid-air collision, jettison, Tybee Island, salvage, detonate, detonator, nukes, National Missile Defense, Denmark, Wassaw Sound, Atlantic City, East Coast, isotope
Description:Lost and abandoned thermonuclear bombs threaten American cities and are apt to be salvaged by terrorists.
IP-address:216.239.138.44

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Creation Date: 11-aug-2000
Expiration Date: 11-aug-2021